\chapter{Coda} \section{What I Learned About \LaTeX{} While Creating This Issue} \subsection{Easy Ways with \textsf{tikz}} I included some illustrations of card layouts back on page \pageref{cards}. Since these are just rectangles, I knew I could create them pretty easily using the \textsf{tikz} package. All I needed were the coordinates where the three rectangles would begin and end, and the coordinates of the nodes where I would put the letters. As it turns out, this was difficult to figure out using my mind alone—there was too much guesswork. I'm a big fan of having the right tools to do a job and then using those tools. I see no point in being a martyr. So I pulled out the best tool I had for this: graph paper and a pencil. No guess work, just straight lines and a bit of counting. I felt like I was in my eighth grade geometry class again, and I actually enjoyed it. Protip: draw it on paper first. \setlength{\fboxsep}{0pt} \setlength{\fboxrule}{0.5pt} \begin{center} \fbox{\includegraphics[scale=0.30]{tikz-on-paper}} \end{center} %\newpage % Use only to keep the afterword together if we end up with orphans \section{Afterword} \begin{multicols}{2} \begin{small} \noindent{}First paragraph. \medskip \begin{flushright} \noindent{}Thanks,\\—Ken \end{flushright} \end{small} \end{multicols}